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Mar 25, 2013
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, education, education, right at the beginning of the child's life? >> on an individual basis, education makes the biggest difference of anything. certainly, in my case, and in many other cases that i know of, people should go to the website, horatio alger society and read the stories of those people, all of whom came from desperate situations and achieved at the highest levels. see what they put into it. those are the kinds of things we need to be putting in front of our young people. >> so, doctor, would you support government investment in early childhood education, increasing that? secondly, where do you stand on the issue of affirmative action? >> yes. early childhood education is good if it's done correctly. we don't want to do it in a way that gives people a message, poor little thing, we're going to take care of you. we want to do it in a way that's empowering and that tends to left people up. as far as affirmative action is concerned, i believe in something, and i've written about it, called compassionate action. we've always been a very gene
, education, education, right at the beginning of the child's life? >> on an individual basis, education makes the biggest difference of anything. certainly, in my case, and in many other cases that i know of, people should go to the website, horatio alger society and read the stories of those people, all of whom came from desperate situations and achieved at the highest levels. see what they put into it. those are the kinds of things we need to be putting in front of our young people....
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Mar 26, 2013
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my job is not just to entertain but do a little educating and teaching so call me at 1-800-743-cnbc. you figure it would have to spill over eventually. the ham-handed way the europeans handled that cyprus situation. dow sinking 64 points, nasdaq down .30%. i had feared that even the best of all the worst plans like this one would be viewed askance by the rest of the world's financial capitals, and that's what happened today. why does it have to go like this? why do we first have to react to europe? i think part of the issue is europe has to plan to bring growth back. it pulls the world down to its own suit as if it were wearing cement galoshes. forced austerity allows jobs to be taken away without environmental enforcement. why build factories in europe when you can make them in mexico, pollute the air, cheap energy for the factory and low shipping costs? that's become the american way. i'm calling it continental-cide. the second issue is credit. confiscating deposits will inspire fear when confidence is needed. fear makes people act differently. act conservatively. it takes away the
my job is not just to entertain but do a little educating and teaching so call me at 1-800-743-cnbc. you figure it would have to spill over eventually. the ham-handed way the europeans handled that cyprus situation. dow sinking 64 points, nasdaq down .30%. i had feared that even the best of all the worst plans like this one would be viewed askance by the rest of the world's financial capitals, and that's what happened today. why does it have to go like this? why do we first have to react to...
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Mar 22, 2013
03/13
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let's start with a tweet from @dereklwilson who says, thanks for the education. thanks for the laughs. hash tag mad money. harlem shake, too. we did a good one. didn't get enough viewers. too many of those right now. what's going on here? under armour, cognizant communications, the home despot, imax, pretty good quarter, and berkshire hathaway. this is very controversial. under armour under a lot of pressure from the bears. people say they are discounting. we've got a power, retail, tech, theater company and a diversified industrial, let's call them insurers, theater, tech, retail and apparel. that's pretty perfect. ♪ hallelujah the twitter guys? smart guys. let's go to angelo, my home state of new jersey. >> caller: how are you, jim? i want to know if i'm diversified. >> fire away. >> okay. british petroleum, bp, mondeliz, mvlz, bristol-meyers squibb, bmy, verizon, vz and public service enterprises, pse&g. >> let me go to work. i pay them every month. utility, bristol-meyers is one of my action alerts charitable trust names. mondeliz is a food company. verizon
let's start with a tweet from @dereklwilson who says, thanks for the education. thanks for the laughs. hash tag mad money. harlem shake, too. we did a good one. didn't get enough viewers. too many of those right now. what's going on here? under armour, cognizant communications, the home despot, imax, pretty good quarter, and berkshire hathaway. this is very controversial. under armour under a lot of pressure from the bears. people say they are discounting. we've got a power, retail, tech,...
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Mar 19, 2013
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. >>> believe it or not, you want to educate yourself about business you can learn a heck of a lot from monopoly, the fabulous board game that i used to win at almost all of the time as a kid mostly because my family didn't want to deal with me being a sore loser. confidentially, i did like to turn the board over and stomp out of the room in tears if i lost! >> wow! >> so i don't blame them for letting me win. you remember how monopoly works, right? when someone lands on the space they owe you 25 smackers monopoly money, but -- oh, it's chinese money. it's probably worth a fortune, but if you own all four railroads and if you have a monopoly on the rail business in this imaginary world, and another player lands on them, then you have to pay the guy $200. that's a fortune, right? that's a fortune. what the heck does this have to do with the real world or the real stock market? simple. it teaches us that as companies have more market share and less competition they can make their customers pay them a heck of a lot more money like the railroads. a monopoly is a wonderful business model. in
. >>> believe it or not, you want to educate yourself about business you can learn a heck of a lot from monopoly, the fabulous board game that i used to win at almost all of the time as a kid mostly because my family didn't want to deal with me being a sore loser. confidentially, i did like to turn the board over and stomp out of the room in tears if i lost! >> wow! >> so i don't blame them for letting me win. you remember how monopoly works, right? when someone lands on...
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Mar 22, 2013
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nation's top education critic david horowitz is about to join us. it was a popular course and they killed it. and without a line. now that's a fast car. it's just another way you'll be traveling at the speed of hertz. (announcer) at scottrade, our clto make their money do more.re (ann) to help me plan my next move, i take scottrade's free, in-branch seminars... plus, their live webinars. i use daily market commentary to improve my strategy. and my local scottrade office guides my learning every step of the way. because they know i don't trade like everybody. i trade like me. i'm with scottrade. (announcer) scottrade... ranked "highest in customer loyalty for brokerage and investment companies." no they don't. hey son. have fun tonight. ♪ ♪ back against the wall ♪ ain't nothin to me ♪ ain't nothin to me [ crowd murmurs ] hey! ♪ [ howls ] ♪ . >>> all right. breaks my heart but stanford university has canned capitalism 101 from its college catalog. they are keeping a course that challenges the moral goodness of markets. this is just another
nation's top education critic david horowitz is about to join us. it was a popular course and they killed it. and without a line. now that's a fast car. it's just another way you'll be traveling at the speed of hertz. (announcer) at scottrade, our clto make their money do more.re (ann) to help me plan my next move, i take scottrade's free, in-branch seminars... plus, their live webinars. i use daily market commentary to improve my strategy. and my local scottrade office guides my learning every...
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Mar 26, 2013
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i have a college education. i've been successful at work. i've been working for 30 years. i'm not doing this. so when this opportunity for platform to employment came along, i joined it, and it changed my mindset. >> after the classes are over, platform to employment opens the door on its biggest innovation. it's an internship with a business that's looking to hire. tell me what that first day was like, walking through the door. >> it was nice to be a part of the workforce, having to go to work in the morning rather than get up in the morning and go look for work. >> here, the office intern isn't a college student; he's 50-something, educated and experienced. for eight weeks, frank o'neill would work at cain management, which owns fast-food restaurants. platform to employment pays o'neill's salary. what do you have to prove, and how do you think that's gonna work out? >> they told me right off the bat. "we have a job. and it's got to get done. and you need to prove yourself that you're the person who can get this job done for us." >> fair enough. >> absolutely. all we're l
i have a college education. i've been successful at work. i've been working for 30 years. i'm not doing this. so when this opportunity for platform to employment came along, i joined it, and it changed my mindset. >> after the classes are over, platform to employment opens the door on its biggest innovation. it's an internship with a business that's looking to hire. tell me what that first day was like, walking through the door. >> it was nice to be a part of the workforce, having...
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Mar 25, 2013
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made his name and fortune in venture capitalism, which he chronicles in his memoir, "valley boy: the education of tom perkins." it is a candid account of his life, his second marriage to romance novelist danielle steel, a manslaughter conviction in a boating accident in france, and the deals that made him so wealthy, starting with the first biotech company, genentech, here in san francisco. he and his partners launched genentech in 1976 with nothing more than a checkbook and an idea. >> the idea was to trick nature into letting us make something that didn't exist in nature -- in particular, human insulin. >> genentech's success led to new ways of treating everything from diabetes to dwarfism, and to getting rich. kleiner perkins' initial investment of $250,000 soared 800-fold to $200 million. >> that's what venture capitalists are created to do, and you can blame converting the orchards of silicon valley into parking lots partly on me and partly on genentech, because we proved that this kind of high-risk, high-tech venture capital could be an enormous home run, and everybody wanted to get in o
made his name and fortune in venture capitalism, which he chronicles in his memoir, "valley boy: the education of tom perkins." it is a candid account of his life, his second marriage to romance novelist danielle steel, a manslaughter conviction in a boating accident in france, and the deals that made him so wealthy, starting with the first biotech company, genentech, here in san francisco. he and his partners launched genentech in 1976 with nothing more than a checkbook and an idea....
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Mar 18, 2013
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for the past eight years, my job has and continues to be not just to entertain you but to educate you. so on this fabulous eighth anniversary of "mad money," i want you to continue to call me at 1-800-743-cnbc. welcome to the eighth anniversary edition of "mad money." not a great day for an anniversary although the dow broke its winning streak. i'll be unabashed about it. sinking 25 points. nasdaq declining -- i realized regular people that play this game needed help. you needed guidance from someone impartial who wasn't after your fees, didn't want your commissions. in short, you needed an investing coach. i've been trying to fill that role every night five nights a week ever since. so tonight to mark the show's fantastic eighth anniversary, we're going to do the exact same thing we always do, help you try to make some money the best way we know how. let's get into it. start with the game plan. we've got a smatter of earnings coming out. before we get to that focus on the event that will control the market next week, there's not too much to this because wednesday there's a federal re
for the past eight years, my job has and continues to be not just to entertain you but to educate you. so on this fabulous eighth anniversary of "mad money," i want you to continue to call me at 1-800-743-cnbc. welcome to the eighth anniversary edition of "mad money." not a great day for an anniversary although the dow broke its winning streak. i'll be unabashed about it. sinking 25 points. nasdaq declining -- i realized regular people that play this game needed help. you...
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Mar 23, 2013
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we'll start with a tweet, thank you for the education, thanks for the laughs, #madmoney. harlem shake, too. yeah, we did a good one. ♪ >> hi, jim, how you doing? >> real good, how about you? >> i got a cold. >> i'm sorry. have you tried z-pack. it kills you but it is also good. >> when i say bo you say yah. boo! >> yah! >> boo! >> yah! >> heather that works for you, she's a swell gal. >> she went to the u. this is about business. you can learn a heck of a lot from monopoly. confidentially, i like to turn the board over and stomp out of the room in tears if i lost. so i don't blame them for letting me win. i bring all this up because you know what we're doing this week, we are playing oligopoly. oligopoly the investing game, we can help try to make you real money. not real money, bogus money. >>> before we get to your tweets, time to catch up on some homework. back on february 6th steve in florida called for input on black rock kelso capital, bkcc for all you home gamers. i didn't know it and introduced digging, black rock kelso invests in what are known as middle-market
we'll start with a tweet, thank you for the education, thanks for the laughs, #madmoney. harlem shake, too. yeah, we did a good one. ♪ >> hi, jim, how you doing? >> real good, how about you? >> i got a cold. >> i'm sorry. have you tried z-pack. it kills you but it is also good. >> when i say bo you say yah. boo! >> yah! >> boo! >> yah! >> heather that works for you, she's a swell gal. >> she went to the u. this is about business. you...
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Mar 18, 2013
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world hunger, spending $50 million a year on projects like feeding programs in ethiopia and agriculture education in afghanistan. and he records it all through the lens of his own camera. >> you all of a sudden begin to kind of look around, and you notice there's a lot of people around that don't look too good. and, you know, they're hungry. and they don't have great living quarters. they may not have access to water. they don't have good sanitation. >> you were seeing farmers who couldn't feed themselves? >> oh, absolutely. i looked at that, and i thought, "you know, this is wrong. i understand agriculture. i should be able to do something about this." [ticking] >> coming up: the challenges of philanthropy. >> you know bill gates. have you said to him, "80% of what you're throwing down there in africa is not gonna work"? >> well, i've said it a little differently, i think, and that is that we need to quit thinking about trying to do it like we do it in america. >> the buffetts and bill gates when 60 minutes on cnbc returns. ♪ [ construction sounds ] ♪ [ watch ticking ] [ engine revs ] come i
world hunger, spending $50 million a year on projects like feeding programs in ethiopia and agriculture education in afghanistan. and he records it all through the lens of his own camera. >> you all of a sudden begin to kind of look around, and you notice there's a lot of people around that don't look too good. and, you know, they're hungry. and they don't have great living quarters. they may not have access to water. they don't have good sanitation. >> you were seeing farmers who...
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Mar 22, 2013
03/13
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we'll start with a tweet, thank you for the education, thanks for the laughs, hash tag mad money. harlem shake, too. yeah, we did a good one. ♪ >> hi, jim, how you doing? >> real good, how about you? >> i got a cold. >> i'm sorry. have you tried z-pack. it kills you but it is also good. >> when i say bo you say yah. boo! >> yah! >> boo! >> yah! >> heather that works for you, she's a swell gal. >> she went to the u. this is about business. you can learn a heck of a lot from monopoly. confidentially, i like to turn the board over and stomp out of the room in tears if i lost. so i don't blame them for letting me win. i bring all this up because you know what we're doing this week, we are playing oligopoly. oligopoly the investing game, we can help try to make you real money. not real money, bogus money. ♪ [ cows moo ] [ sizzling ] more rain... [ thunder rumbles ] ♪ [ male announcer ] when the world moves... futures move first. learn futures from experienced pros with dedicated chats and daily live webinars. and trade with papermoney to test-drive the market. ♪ all on thinkors
we'll start with a tweet, thank you for the education, thanks for the laughs, hash tag mad money. harlem shake, too. yeah, we did a good one. ♪ >> hi, jim, how you doing? >> real good, how about you? >> i got a cold. >> i'm sorry. have you tried z-pack. it kills you but it is also good. >> when i say bo you say yah. boo! >> yah! >> boo! >> yah! >> heather that works for you, she's a swell gal. >> she went to the u. this is about...
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Mar 26, 2013
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and they're obsessed with education. and it gets to people's hearts. it's what their kids' future is, it's their ability to afford school, to get ahead in life. there's more than just the initial issues of math for us to deal with. >> right. >> but if you're not there -- >> it's got to be a growth message. reince pry prescribe us, thank you very much for taking the time to come back on "the kudlow report." let's continue the discussion. is reince priebus right or is the gop missing the message here? we bring back chris co phone us and guy benson. chris, i go to you on this. because i think that the republicans are doing exactly the wrong thing in a lot of places right now. you've got the chairman of the house budget committee, call paul ryan, a very smart guy, used to be a follower of jack kemp. he argues austerity. he says if you balance the budget, the economy will grow. i say you will balance the budget if the economy does grow through lower taxes and lower regulations and more opportunity. i think they've got it back-assward it my point. >> listen,
and they're obsessed with education. and it gets to people's hearts. it's what their kids' future is, it's their ability to afford school, to get ahead in life. there's more than just the initial issues of math for us to deal with. >> right. >> but if you're not there -- >> it's got to be a growth message. reince pry prescribe us, thank you very much for taking the time to come back on "the kudlow report." let's continue the discussion. is reince priebus right or is...
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Mar 21, 2013
03/13
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georgetown education paying off right there. to see the full bracket in our competition, log on and remember you can get in on the game by tweeting us at cnbc fast money. tell us which stocks you're picking. there will never be any ties because you of course are the fifth trader. now let's get to your fast money madness pick from someone who knows his way around a basketball court. our next guest is the general manager of the indiana pacers and author of help the helper, building a culture of extreme team work. good to have you with us. >> great to be here. >> you're a long-term watcher of the show. so i know you have an opinion on this one. microsoft or qualcomm? >> i'm going with dr. jay, qualcomm. higher peg ratio. higher beta stock. you got to go with growth rate long-term. >> good for you. except your vote doesn't count here. [ laughter ] >> thanks, guys. i appreciate that. thanks for having me on the show. but your vote will count on the next one. what do we have for him to tee him up? i'll ask you this, who do you like in
georgetown education paying off right there. to see the full bracket in our competition, log on and remember you can get in on the game by tweeting us at cnbc fast money. tell us which stocks you're picking. there will never be any ties because you of course are the fifth trader. now let's get to your fast money madness pick from someone who knows his way around a basketball court. our next guest is the general manager of the indiana pacers and author of help the helper, building a culture of...
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Mar 26, 2013
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. >> start a trust fund for his education. >> start your own trust fund for your education. he's still got a year and a half to go. >> in high school. >> is he going to commute? we asked him that. i don't remember what his answer was. that's right. he was trying to finish school. >> it comes so naturally. i do think it's easier for that generation. >> not that easy. that kid was smooth. >> he is. but you understand. how many apps on your iphone? i have an ncaa. i follow the scores. that's it. and skiing thing. i find out when the snow in, you know, copper. >> that's all you really have? >> yeah. >> you were ordering black cars when -- where is your car? you were ordering black cars when people didn't know what they were. >> uber. >> it's pretty cool to call and there is one in the neighborhood. great business model. pandora. >> you have pandora. >> no, i don't. no. >> moving along here. >> steve cohen. >> that's interesting. >> page 6 this morning. >> this is new york post, page 6. >> disclaimer because we don't know what it all means. steve cohen just bought picasso. they s
. >> start a trust fund for his education. >> start your own trust fund for your education. he's still got a year and a half to go. >> in high school. >> is he going to commute? we asked him that. i don't remember what his answer was. that's right. he was trying to finish school. >> it comes so naturally. i do think it's easier for that generation. >> not that easy. that kid was smooth. >> he is. but you understand. how many apps on your iphone? i have...
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Mar 25, 2013
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the for profit education company ripping higher. another name in the green. second quarter profit drops 79%. revenue fell amid lower enrollments. still, results besting the street's expectations. another name we should mention, dollar general, telling us today that sales growth this year could best the strength in 2012. but the company's rival, family dollar, actually slipping. analysts tell me part of the problem here, dollar general now saying it's roll out of tobacco products exceeding expectations. remember, family dollar got into the tobacco business about a year ago. so some worry now about the impact the company might feel. blackberry another name in the red. goldman sachs cutting its rating to neutral on this one. price target 17 bucks. the analysts talking about the disappointing u.s. launch of the new z-10 smartphone. we'll end here on facebook. falling to the lowest level this year, since trading at a six-month high of 32.51 on january 28th. facebook shares down some 20%. sue? back to you. >> thank you very much, josh. >>> we have less than an hour
the for profit education company ripping higher. another name in the green. second quarter profit drops 79%. revenue fell amid lower enrollments. still, results besting the street's expectations. another name we should mention, dollar general, telling us today that sales growth this year could best the strength in 2012. but the company's rival, family dollar, actually slipping. analysts tell me part of the problem here, dollar general now saying it's roll out of tobacco products exceeding...
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Mar 25, 2013
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for profit education company posted quarterly earnings well above estimates. reuters reporting the nation's largest pork producer hired goldman sachs to wage strategic options. the euro is under $1.29 slipping below the 200-day moving average. they are saying the cyprus bailout deal could be a new template for resolving eurozone banking problems. and with that comment, bob pisani, markets did turn sour. >> thank you, very much. he did, he dropped the markets. let's take a look at italian stocks. europe kind of tanked on these comments. this is where it made the comment about half an hour ago. everybody e-mailed me, what does a template for europe, what the heck does that mean. i think what it means is if you need to recapitalize first you go to your bond holders and shareholders and get money off of them and then maybe you go to the uninsured deposit holders before you go to the ecb. i think that's what's got people concerned right now. italian banks, the europe dropped. italian banks dropped. tessa, all down, look here, up 5, almost 6%. europe ones voicely fa
for profit education company posted quarterly earnings well above estimates. reuters reporting the nation's largest pork producer hired goldman sachs to wage strategic options. the euro is under $1.29 slipping below the 200-day moving average. they are saying the cyprus bailout deal could be a new template for resolving eurozone banking problems. and with that comment, bob pisani, markets did turn sour. >> thank you, very much. he did, he dropped the markets. let's take a look at italian...
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Mar 20, 2013
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but on the other hand, you know, in france and in europe, the level of education for people is very high. so we have a very, very strong, you know, population to work. we have very strong infrastructure. so it's also a big place to invest. >> are you a supporter of holland and some of the things he's done? >> well, you know, they've done a few things. i would love to have more to be done, to be done because i think, again, france needs to be more attractive. >> are you rooming with -- >> i thought he was in russia now. >> even though he's an honorary citizen. >> we have a lot of business in europe, in russia, actually, and we are citizens of the world. >> that's a good answer. >> that's a good answer. >> very slippery. >> you spent a lot of time on diversity in women. >> yeah. >> and women in the workplace, given cheryl samberg's new book is a real issue. >> yeah. >> have you read the book? >> no, i've not read the book, but i've heard about the book, yep. >> the reason i ask -- >> what were you going to say? >> i have another question when you're done. >> the reason i was going to ask w
but on the other hand, you know, in france and in europe, the level of education for people is very high. so we have a very, very strong, you know, population to work. we have very strong infrastructure. so it's also a big place to invest. >> are you a supporter of holland and some of the things he's done? >> well, you know, they've done a few things. i would love to have more to be done, to be done because i think, again, france needs to be more attractive. >> are you rooming...
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Mar 18, 2013
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you saw salespeople who were educated and knowledgeable about what joe fresh is. you did see a bit more traffic this weekend than what you saw last weekend. but there's a lot more of this that's needed. >> in terms of this other note, and i hate to ask you about a competitor's research, but do you think that within the realm of possibility for jcpenney to examine the possibility of adopting a structure where it takes a certain percentage and leases that out to other retailers? >> we've seen concession models before where retailers lease out space. we do think that works in some instances. but it has to be shops and manufacturers that all cater to a similar customer. you've got to get the brand identity back. >> i mean, when i first read this note from isi by first thought is who would lease out space within a jcpenney. can you think of any brands off the top of your head that would go that route? >> one of the things we've seen is we've seen johnson go out to different vendors to lease space. until you can prove that you're a driver of traffic, then in essence you
you saw salespeople who were educated and knowledgeable about what joe fresh is. you did see a bit more traffic this weekend than what you saw last weekend. but there's a lot more of this that's needed. >> in terms of this other note, and i hate to ask you about a competitor's research, but do you think that within the realm of possibility for jcpenney to examine the possibility of adopting a structure where it takes a certain percentage and leases that out to other retailers? >>...
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Mar 26, 2013
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in other words, your home value is worth less than your mortgage if you have a high school education or less and the white working class, they're all around 40%, but now let's take a look at these next two groups here. tea party supporters, 45%. if your home value is going down 50% so clearly an issue here if it is risk off the table and not optimistic about the economy and these tend to be or at least in greater percentages are your gold bugs compared to all adults in the economy. what about generally looking at the stock market. let's see, these are the percentages that you have heard about some about some critical financial issues here. 80%, how about the dow being an all-time high. only 66%. >> reporter: and only 29% if you highlight that, that's the least well known economic story that we've asked about in the past several years. what are people's attitudes toward the dow being an all-time high? if we could move on, yes we can. the dow being an all-time high. the does that mean the dow is better 22% of the public say that's the case. the corporations and the wealthy are doing be
in other words, your home value is worth less than your mortgage if you have a high school education or less and the white working class, they're all around 40%, but now let's take a look at these next two groups here. tea party supporters, 45%. if your home value is going down 50% so clearly an issue here if it is risk off the table and not optimistic about the economy and these tend to be or at least in greater percentages are your gold bugs compared to all adults in the economy. what about...
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Mar 20, 2013
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i said, listen, you're an educated guy. you must have had a lot of wealthy clients and business people. here's what he said. >> all the assurances they get from european officials was that their deposits are not at risk. there may be other need for additional taxes for significant government cuts. the loans actually supports their banking system. but there was never discussion of any cut on depolisitsdeposit >> in other words, they were expecting traditional types of austerity. when we have more news we'll get it to you. >> let's cross over to moscow with steve sedgwick. we used to be colleagues in london for a long time. i know you've done a lot of reporting in moscow. isn't it the case that the russians will string the cypriots along here? they will get much more if they need to when the banking system collapses if that's where we're headed. surely. >> yeah, simon, you make a very good point. there's a lot of people thinking, what's the gain? they've already let the money back in 2011, they led with 2.5 billion euros. so
i said, listen, you're an educated guy. you must have had a lot of wealthy clients and business people. here's what he said. >> all the assurances they get from european officials was that their deposits are not at risk. there may be other need for additional taxes for significant government cuts. the loans actually supports their banking system. but there was never discussion of any cut on depolisitsdeposit >> in other words, they were expecting traditional types of austerity. when...
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Mar 21, 2013
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supporters of the decision say it makes sense financially and will improve educational opportunities for thousands of children. but opponents, many of them outraged parents, don't see it that way. and they're vowing to fight it. george howell is following the story. former chicago-based correspondent. this is a tough one because there are a lot of folks feeling very impassioned about this and not clear whether it's the right thing to do. >> the thing about it, there's still a lot that's not very clear about what will happen. what we know is this, fredricka, the third largest public school system in the country, so this is going to affect thousands of kids once we hear which schools will be closed. and secondly there's a big concern, fredricka, that this will affect mostly p lly predomy african-american communities. again, we don't know which schools or which areas will be closed, but that's the big concern right now. as you mentioned, this is reportedly going to list some 50 schools that will be closed described as underutilized and underresourced schools. >> does that mean the popul
supporters of the decision say it makes sense financially and will improve educational opportunities for thousands of children. but opponents, many of them outraged parents, don't see it that way. and they're vowing to fight it. george howell is following the story. former chicago-based correspondent. this is a tough one because there are a lot of folks feeling very impassioned about this and not clear whether it's the right thing to do. >> the thing about it, there's still a lot that's...
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israelis understand the value of education and have produced ten nobel laureates. israeli's understand the power of invention and your universities educate engineers and inventors. and that spirit has led to economic growth and human progress. solar power and electric cars and bandages and prosthetic limbs that save lives, stem cell research and new drugs that treat disease. cell phones and computer technology that change the way people around the world live. so if people want to see the future of the world economy, they should look at tel aviv, home to hundreds of start-ups and research centers. israelis are so active on social media that every day seemed to bring a different facebook campaign about where i should give this speech. that innovation is just as important to the relationship between the united states and israel as our security cooperation. our first free trade agreement in the world was reached with israel, nearly three decades ago. today, the trade between our two countries is at $40 billion every year. more personal, that partnership is creating new
israelis understand the value of education and have produced ten nobel laureates. israeli's understand the power of invention and your universities educate engineers and inventors. and that spirit has led to economic growth and human progress. solar power and electric cars and bandages and prosthetic limbs that save lives, stem cell research and new drugs that treat disease. cell phones and computer technology that change the way people around the world live. so if people want to see the future...
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Mar 23, 2013
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young people, minorities, college educated voters, especially women. majority issues. while it is difficult to pass them congressionally, blocking them and unifying opposition is not without cost in terms of peeling from constituency to win back the white house. >> think of it as a presidential race, you look at the national numbers, that's one thing. when you look at the battleground states, that's another. one thing about joe biden. joe biden was part of the coalition that got the ban on assault weapons passed. >> that was a long time ago. >> he feels strongly. joe biden is a visceral politician. what you played in that sound byte, i feel sorry for my political colleagues, they have to vote this way, even though they don't really believe it. when you think about that, it is a tough statement. >> gloria, the problem is more the opposite, in '94 when they passed it, 38 house republicans from blue districts felt compelled to vote for it. today, gun control advocates have not been able to, they have to go out to mayor efforts and others, they have to beat some republican
young people, minorities, college educated voters, especially women. majority issues. while it is difficult to pass them congressionally, blocking them and unifying opposition is not without cost in terms of peeling from constituency to win back the white house. >> think of it as a presidential race, you look at the national numbers, that's one thing. when you look at the battleground states, that's another. one thing about joe biden. joe biden was part of the coalition that got the ban...
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Mar 24, 2013
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this is education, spending all of the programs that you are passionate about that will be squeezed as entitlement spending is larger and larger. >> they will be squeezed. if we look beyond, look at 2025, 2030, something has to give. we can't keep squeezing nondefense, ndd, nondefense discretionary. that is already pret itty tight. so something will have to give. some combination of higher revenues, finding ways to save on entitlement. not necessarily benefit cuts but ways to save money on entitlements. use the bargaining power of medicare, fine. that's worth talking about but not a reason to not do deficit spending to support the economy now. >> the argument would be, and this is the argue made by bob rubin and many others that do some stimulus spending but put in place a long-term plan to ensure the markets that you have a plan. you are not hostage to fortune in case interest rates spike suddenly. off process in place that allows it to happen and don't get hemorrhaging of nondefense. >> i'd like to me see men and women of goodwill come together and produce a long term-term solution.
this is education, spending all of the programs that you are passionate about that will be squeezed as entitlement spending is larger and larger. >> they will be squeezed. if we look beyond, look at 2025, 2030, something has to give. we can't keep squeezing nondefense, ndd, nondefense discretionary. that is already pret itty tight. so something will have to give. some combination of higher revenues, finding ways to save on entitlement. not necessarily benefit cuts but ways to save money...
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Mar 23, 2013
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>> the first thing they need to do is get educated. understand the difference between risk and volatility. they need to learn the rules of the game. ryan and i have written countless books on this stuff. learn the rules and don't feel sbintimidat intimidated. go to people who are not going to sell you a product. they are not going to sell you anything and give you great advice. >> you pay them for the value of their advice, but you pay them a fee like a lawyer or accountant? >> right. and be careful. anybody you talk to is going to try to sell you something. it's more of an intimidation factor. what happens is we don't have money mentors. the the reason i went into a mutual fund is because i had a friend who did it. the business model, it's really made it into a point it's not sustainable for a lot of advisers to work with people barely making it. so it's all about priorities. so. >> ryan is big on this as well. you're big on mentoring people. this is one of your biggest points in your book. >> it's time for us to start looking for edu
>> the first thing they need to do is get educated. understand the difference between risk and volatility. they need to learn the rules of the game. ryan and i have written countless books on this stuff. learn the rules and don't feel sbintimidat intimidated. go to people who are not going to sell you a product. they are not going to sell you anything and give you great advice. >> you pay them for the value of their advice, but you pay them a fee like a lawyer or accountant?...
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Mar 24, 2013
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>> we have to educate ourselves. direct purchase programs, many companies are charging zero dollars for you to invest directly. stock websites that invest $4 per transaction fee. you have bye buyandhold.com. it's very important for you to educate yourself about how to go about purchasing different types of things. folio.com, oneshare.com allows you to invest in one stock and get one share as a gift or something. >>> like a gift to a kid or something, to encourage them. >> put it up on your wall and gives you good motivation. i'm advocating making sure that before you put your dollar in anything, get fully educated. >> both have written great books that appeal to those who are otherwise intimidated by the idea of getting into the stock market. lewis and ryan, thank you. okay 47% of you who don't invest, that's it. i'm off my soap box. no more complaining, no more berating you for not cashing in on this rally. next i'm talking to the 53% of you who do invest in the stock markets. stocks are still on a tear, but how lon
>> we have to educate ourselves. direct purchase programs, many companies are charging zero dollars for you to invest directly. stock websites that invest $4 per transaction fee. you have bye buyandhold.com. it's very important for you to educate yourself about how to go about purchasing different types of things. folio.com, oneshare.com allows you to invest in one stock and get one share as a gift or something. >>> like a gift to a kid or something, to encourage them. >>...
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Mar 22, 2013
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so that's 35,000 low-income kids that could good back into early education programs. i'm just using that to give an example for this. can the obama administration give gitmo $200 million without seeming utterly hypocritical? >> i don't know how you do it. we had a plan back years ago to spend $120 million to build a complex at guantanamo. we were told it was a temporary facility and it was nuts to spend that kind of money so they built a $12 million temporary facility instead. as you say, when we're in a time of sequester and cutting money to spend that kind of, you know, almost a quarter billion dollars to detain in essence 80 men is outrageous. >> it seems shocking. rosa, when you look at the -- you said the $49 million they swant for high value detainees. there are 16 detainee that's fall in that category. so $49 million for the new facility is $3 million per diem takenee. so we're already spending $60 million a year just to operate guantanamo. should we be spending $3 million a detainee for something like this? >> you know, erin, when you're at the pentagon you di
so that's 35,000 low-income kids that could good back into early education programs. i'm just using that to give an example for this. can the obama administration give gitmo $200 million without seeming utterly hypocritical? >> i don't know how you do it. we had a plan back years ago to spend $120 million to build a complex at guantanamo. we were told it was a temporary facility and it was nuts to spend that kind of money so they built a $12 million temporary facility instead. as you say,...
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Mar 21, 2013
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. >> it educates you because it is very democratic. people are really voting for what they think is funny by watching it and passing it around to their friends. >> i would like the people who are at home watching the emmys right now to help me pull a big prank on the people who are not watching. it's been a big year for kimmel and in addition to the emmys and providing comedy for the white house correspondents association dinner he got engaged. so you're marrying one of your writers. >> i am, yes. she got hired as a writer's assistant and she started writing jokes. after a while it became obvious that we had to hire her as a writer. her material was so strong. for me, weirdly, that's like a -- that just -- that's really like what attracted me to her. she's funny. >> why is that weird? that's nice. >> i guess it's good but it is weird to be, you know, to have a work assignment be what attracted you to somebody. that is kind of -- >> that's not weird. you're in love with her mind. >> there you go. >> i mean she is very beautiful -- whanc
. >> it educates you because it is very democratic. people are really voting for what they think is funny by watching it and passing it around to their friends. >> i would like the people who are at home watching the emmys right now to help me pull a big prank on the people who are not watching. it's been a big year for kimmel and in addition to the emmys and providing comedy for the white house correspondents association dinner he got engaged. so you're marrying one of your...
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Mar 18, 2013
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we as a society have an obligation to do more to educate our young people about rape. they need to know it is a horrible crime of violence. it simply is not okay. >> and then there's the social media aspect of it all. prosecutors admitted that without those texts and those awful cell phone pictures they really didn't have much of a case. judge hatchet presided over one of the juvenile court systems in the country in atlanta before becoming a television judge and kathryn redmond is founder of the national coalition against violent athletes. judge hatchet, i thought of you immediately when i heard these verdicts and when i saw those kids and when i heard the reaction from the victim's mom and i wondered because this was so powerful and there was so much coverage on tv and social media, will this be the wake-up call that's needed for young people, many of whom you've seen come through your courtroom? >> absolutely. i presided over far too many cases like this. as i said last week, this really needs to be a teachable moment. i say that not just as a judge but as a parent t
we as a society have an obligation to do more to educate our young people about rape. they need to know it is a horrible crime of violence. it simply is not okay. >> and then there's the social media aspect of it all. prosecutors admitted that without those texts and those awful cell phone pictures they really didn't have much of a case. judge hatchet presided over one of the juvenile court systems in the country in atlanta before becoming a television judge and kathryn redmond is founder...
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Mar 20, 2013
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the number we saw last year was really as you said before based on educational record review. this survey was based essentially on a phone display and who responded to that asking parents, yes or no. had a medical professional diagnosed their child with an autism disorder. so these numbers get us in the ballpark. but they really don't confirm a true number and because they don't confirm a true number they really don't tell us if there's been a true increase, if there has been, the size of that increase. >> last year's number from the cdc was one in 88 kids. this year's is one in 50. it just seems like that's a chasm, a huge shift. >> different studies, different methods. that's why you end up with different numbers. you know, again, as i said, i think if you go about looking for something in one way, you tend to find something differently than if you look in a different way. so, you know, i think the hammer home message here is autism is common. if you ask most experts to say what is the true prevalence rate, they're going to vary a little bit on their numbers. if you ask most
the number we saw last year was really as you said before based on educational record review. this survey was based essentially on a phone display and who responded to that asking parents, yes or no. had a medical professional diagnosed their child with an autism disorder. so these numbers get us in the ballpark. but they really don't confirm a true number and because they don't confirm a true number they really don't tell us if there's been a true increase, if there has been, the size of that...
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who tried to get rid of the department of education is the one who wants to push education. it's ridiculous to think the tent that wanted to gut the teachers union want to push education. the party that wanted to take funding away from education is now the party in favor of education. that's reason i started laughing. >> those policieses worked well for you over the last 40 years. those schools that you're professing that teachers unions have a hold on on are doing really well. where school choice and charter schools that's what's doing well and voters across minority voters to voters of every ethnicity tick have seen the benefits of those kind of schools. >> by this argument, we can see how difficult the road the republicans have before them. >> thanks for breaking format. >> hey, no problem. i like contention. up next, president obama heading to israel this week. his first visit to the country as commander in chief. one item likely on the agenda, iran. and its continued pursuit 6 nuclear weapons. "washington post" reporting iran is doubling done on its efforts in the face
who tried to get rid of the department of education is the one who wants to push education. it's ridiculous to think the tent that wanted to gut the teachers union want to push education. the party that wanted to take funding away from education is now the party in favor of education. that's reason i started laughing. >> those policieses worked well for you over the last 40 years. those schools that you're professing that teachers unions have a hold on on are doing really well. where...
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find out which voters they're now going after and what they regret. education is where it can take you. [now arriving: city hospital] which is why we're proud to help connect our students with leading employers across the nation. [next stop financial center] >> the republican party widely viewed as being stuffy, out of touch, especially scary, a bunch old men? and this is what the party is saying about itself today. i'm not making this up. these are the words i just read right out of the gop self described autopsy. that's right, they're calling this an autopsy. remember, campaign 2012, they lost the presidential election, lost seats in the house, blew an opportunity to seize control of the senate. here is the party's chairman, rins pl reince priebus. >> i think wanted the report to be real, they wanted it to be honest, if it had to be raw and maybe few pieces of china needed to be broken. but i think this is what our party needed. >> so let's stick straight into this. his specialty is republican ad campaigns. alex, welcome. good grief, stuffy, out of touch, scary, do you think the part
find out which voters they're now going after and what they regret. education is where it can take you. [now arriving: city hospital] which is why we're proud to help connect our students with leading employers across the nation. [next stop financial center] >> the republican party widely viewed as being stuffy, out of touch, especially scary, a bunch old men? and this is what the party is saying about itself today. i'm not making this up. these are the words i just read right out of the...
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giving our veterans the benefits and education and job opportunities they have earned. >> still so much of that sacred promise is unfulfilled promise. by the end of this month, more than 1 million claims for disability benefits will be pending at the veteran's administration. of those two-thirds backlogged for 125 days or more. on average, processing of veteran's claim takes 260 days, some drag out for years. veterans came to capitol hill this week to demand action, but lawmakers say the problem lies with the veteran's administration and a failure to computerize records. >> i'm still baffled that i can send a package anywhere in the world and get on-line and track it through ups and know where it is and who signed for it and i have veterans two years later wondering where their file is, who saw it and what is going on with it. >> one claims list in north carolina was so weighted with paperwork the building was in danger of collapsing. when we return, eric shinseki in his first sunday interview. [ female announcer ] band-aid brand has quiltvent technology with air channels to let boo boo
giving our veterans the benefits and education and job opportunities they have earned. >> still so much of that sacred promise is unfulfilled promise. by the end of this month, more than 1 million claims for disability benefits will be pending at the veteran's administration. of those two-thirds backlogged for 125 days or more. on average, processing of veteran's claim takes 260 days, some drag out for years. veterans came to capitol hill this week to demand action, but lawmakers say the...
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your show, education under arrest, airs tomorrow night at 8:00 p.m. on pbs. and it's well-worth watching. thomas, thank you, as always. >> thank you, piers. >> and we'll be right back. i had enough of feeling embarrassed about my skin. [ designer ] enough of just covering up my moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. i decided enough is enough. ♪ [ spa lady ] i started enbrel. it's clinically proven to provide clearer skin. [ rv guy ] enbrel may not work for everyone -- and may not clear you completely, but for many, it gets skin clearer fast, within 2 months, and keeps it clearer through 6 months. [ male announcer ] enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal events, including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders, and allergic reactions have occurred. before starting enbrel, your doctor should test you for tuberculosis and discuss whether you've been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. you should not start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. tell you
your show, education under arrest, airs tomorrow night at 8:00 p.m. on pbs. and it's well-worth watching. thomas, thank you, as always. >> thank you, piers. >> and we'll be right back. i had enough of feeling embarrassed about my skin. [ designer ] enough of just covering up my moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. i decided enough is enough. ♪ [ spa lady ] i started enbrel. it's clinically proven to provide clearer skin. [ rv guy ] enbrel may not work for everyone -- and may not...
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we also have to educate the parents. and especially the academic institutions that hired these coaches, that allowed these coaches to stay, that allowed this whole culture to permeate. >> dr. drew, we have two elements to this. we have many elements, but two specific elements. what happened before the actual incident and during the incident itself, the crime. and then what happened after. everything that everyone posted online, all the blaming of the victim, all the sharing of the videos. and i want to ask you this. >> yeah. >> we as grown-ups seem to have problems stopping and filtering our meanness between our fingers and our tweets. we are doing a terrible job at that. you can just log onto my twitter account and see what people say about me and what kind of words they've used. they've never met me. >> it's brutal, right? >> what do we expect from kids with far fewer tools than we have? >> actually, you bring up two big points. i want to push one up front which is that adolescence, who are acting out sexually, meaning
we also have to educate the parents. and especially the academic institutions that hired these coaches, that allowed these coaches to stay, that allowed this whole culture to permeate. >> dr. drew, we have two elements to this. we have many elements, but two specific elements. what happened before the actual incident and during the incident itself, the crime. and then what happened after. everything that everyone posted online, all the blaming of the victim, all the sharing of the videos....
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the importance that palestinian families place on education. i think of the entrepreneurs determined to create something new, like the young palestinian woman i met at the entrepreneurship summit that i hosted who wants to build recreational centers for palestinian youth. i think of the aspirations that so many young plichs have for their future, which is why i'm looking forward to visiting with some of them right after we conclude this press conference. that's why we can't give up. because of young palestinians and young israelis who deserve a better future than one that is continually defined by conflict. whenever i meet these young people, whether they are palestinian or israeli, i'm reminded of my own daughters and i know what hopes and aspirati n aspirations i have for them. those of us in the united states understand that change takes time, but it is also possible. because there was a time when my daughters could not expect to have the same opportunities in their own country as somebody else's daughters. what's true in the united states c
the importance that palestinian families place on education. i think of the entrepreneurs determined to create something new, like the young palestinian woman i met at the entrepreneurship summit that i hosted who wants to build recreational centers for palestinian youth. i think of the aspirations that so many young plichs have for their future, which is why i'm looking forward to visiting with some of them right after we conclude this press conference. that's why we can't give up. because of...
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for civil rights, brown versus board of education. for women's rights, roe v. wade. now gay rights advocates are hoping, this is the case that the u.s. supreme court heard today on whether same sex marriage should be legal. and we are now getting the audio from inside the nation's highest court. >> there is some 40,000 children in california according to the brief that live with same-sex parents. and they want their parents to have full recognition and full status. the voices of those children is important in this case, don't you think? >> at the heart of the case is proposition 8 or prop 8, which bans same-sex marriage. californians approved it five years ago. but these two same-sex couples, the plaintiffs in this case, are arguing that keeping them from getting married is unconstitutional. one of them spoke about it after the hearing today. >> more than anything i believe in love. and proposition 8 is a discriminatory law that hurts people, it hurts gays and lesbians in california and it hurts the children we're raising and it does so for no good reason. >> on the
for civil rights, brown versus board of education. for women's rights, roe v. wade. now gay rights advocates are hoping, this is the case that the u.s. supreme court heard today on whether same sex marriage should be legal. and we are now getting the audio from inside the nation's highest court. >> there is some 40,000 children in california according to the brief that live with same-sex parents. and they want their parents to have full recognition and full status. the voices of those...
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really eliminating insight into the progress of the young and the education of this country. right now, thank you as always. we will be right back. i've always had to keep my eye on her... but, i didn't always watch out for myself. with so much noise about health care... i tuned it all out. with unitedhealthcare, i get information that matters... my individual health profile. not random statistics. they even reward me for addressing my health risks.
really eliminating insight into the progress of the young and the education of this country. right now, thank you as always. we will be right back. i've always had to keep my eye on her... but, i didn't always watch out for myself. with so much noise about health care... i tuned it all out. with unitedhealthcare, i get information that matters... my individual health profile. not random statistics. they even reward me for addressing my health risks.
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yesterday when bloomberg was interviewed, he said that this was a way for him to educate people and in these red states where i live in south georgia, we don't need the education from michael bloomberg about our guns, rights to guns. most are in favor of some type of backgrund checks. in georgia, to have a carry permit, you have one. the devil is in the details. i'm not confident in eric holder and the department of justice to implement laws, new laws on the books when he won't even enforce the current gun laws on the books. >> so does patrick have something here that mayor bloomberg's reputation as a guy who runs a nanny state or tries to, does he really have any sway over people who are on the fence? >> this is a political red herring. oh, this week it's michael bloomberg and it used to be nancy pelosi and it used to be barack obama. you can use all the scary liberal names, but the reality on the ground, police who don't tend to vote democratic, even police are in favor of what the mayors are suggesting. michael bloomberg maying t be t face, but he's speaking for mayors there clevela
yesterday when bloomberg was interviewed, he said that this was a way for him to educate people and in these red states where i live in south georgia, we don't need the education from michael bloomberg about our guns, rights to guns. most are in favor of some type of backgrund checks. in georgia, to have a carry permit, you have one. the devil is in the details. i'm not confident in eric holder and the department of justice to implement laws, new laws on the books when he won't even enforce the...
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however, we stand by the content in our program as safe and educational for our viewers. that being said, is it common sense? what is this going to mean for -- i want to know for people who are giving advice on television? are they going to think twice about doing it for this lawsuit? you say it's going to be thrown out, but you never know. >> i would think twice. you got to give a disclaimer. that's number one. but you can't over disclaim on a tv show. we know that. so there's a common sense element here. >> of course. >> and viewer discretion is always advised. this person has a particular condition that's numbness. i mean, okay. your feet can't feel it. could your hand feel it? >> have you watched the dr. oz show? everything is advice. every single segment. >> but i don't follow it as if he is my doctor. >> right. >> that is where we're lacking in the suit. that's where the special relationship is created that imposes a legal duty that i think is absent here. >> what about just talk shows? he's a doctor. what about on talk shows if someone says hey don i have a questio
however, we stand by the content in our program as safe and educational for our viewers. that being said, is it common sense? what is this going to mean for -- i want to know for people who are giving advice on television? are they going to think twice about doing it for this lawsuit? you say it's going to be thrown out, but you never know. >> i would think twice. you got to give a disclaimer. that's number one. but you can't over disclaim on a tv show. we know that. so there's a common...
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administrator filed a civil rights complaint that led to a federal investigation by the department of education into how the university handles and reports rape cases. what do you think the investigation is going to find here? >> they're going to find that there is a pervasive culture of sexual assault where the university acted with deliberate indifference. >> reporter: if an administrator tells a student rape is like football, what does that tell you about the culture here? >> well, i'm not going to comment on any specific case but i think that it absolutely needs to be the case that our administrator's respond in a way that's supportive and fair to all parties involve in the incidents. >> reporter: the chancellor of unc, the federal probe comes amid new outrage on the chapel hill campus over a case before the student-run honor court, a young woman unsuccessfully sought punishment for an ex-boyfriend she claimed sexually abused her. instead, she ended up facing honor court charges of intimidation what do you say to these women who say the system failed them? >> well, we're supportive of our s
administrator filed a civil rights complaint that led to a federal investigation by the department of education into how the university handles and reports rape cases. what do you think the investigation is going to find here? >> they're going to find that there is a pervasive culture of sexual assault where the university acted with deliberate indifference. >> reporter: if an administrator tells a student rape is like football, what does that tell you about the culture here?...